Garry Nelson's teacher
Well-known member
How did you know how far you’d ran and when you’d actually completed the 26.2? I imagine GPS watches would have shown up their limitations on such a course and been fairly inaccurate and you’d surely have lost count of the laps.
This is a very good question and I admit that it bothered me before the event as obviously it would differ from a standard event where there'd be km or mile markers. I thought of how to do this and came up with some possibilities:
1. buy a clicker - I believe that golfers have these to record the number of their shots
2. jelly babies - take out 36 and bite one in half and ingest every lap (I'd be too tight to buy 72)
3. finally get a bloody Garmin and at least this would record distance and possibly laps too if I could work out how it functioned (I couldn't)
I went for option 3 and 'splashed out'(I told you I was tight) £30 on a second-hand Garmin 305 Foreunner. I thought that this would also be helpful for pacing purposes. It ran out of power as I left the house. So with no Garmin, no clicker and not having the sense to stop and buy some jelly babies I went on a wing and a prayer. My impression was that most of my fellow competitors also didn't have a lap recorder of any kind.
However, it was no problem - there were so few of us that the guy recording the laps would shout out as you past as long as you asked him! Obviously you couldn't do this with every lap. And the only lap they guaranteed to tell you was your final one.
The really weird thing for me was that I intended to run an even-split 4 hour - and obviously failed miserably. But when I got the data through, it recorded my half way point at 2.00.03 so at one point I was pretty much bang on although I had no idea at the time.